Skip to content
Inside the Labs

Hair Labs · Science Series

Chapters
Continue exploring
The Science

How Stress Greys

Most of us have heard stories about someone 'going grey overnight' after a shock or a brutal period of stress. Even though everyday experience suggested there was something real behind these stories, they often sounded more like drama than biology, because it was not clear how emotions could reach into a tiny hair follicle and change its colour.

That picture is different now. A landmark study from Harvard University finally mapped the missing biological link. Researchers traced a direct chain from psychological stress, through the body's stress-activated nerves, right into the stem cells that maintain hair pigment.

From greying anecdotes to mechanisms.

This proved that stress acts as a physical 'neuro-attack' on the follicle. While this attack can bankrupt the stem cell reserve, human mapping has since revealed that in earlier stages, the process can be dynamic — temporarily switching pigment production off and back on as stress levels change.

John McCain before and after being a prisoner of war.
John McCain before and after being a prisoner of war.

Why we need stress.

Stress is not just 'feeling worried'. It is a built-in survival programme that briefly changes how the whole body works. The nervous system can run in two broad regimes:

In everyday life these two modes balance each other, but during stress the dial swings strongly toward the sympathetic side. When that happens, two stress responses are triggered:

In short bursts these reactions are useful and protective. The problem starts when stress is strong or constant. Long, repeated activation gradually wears on tissues that depend on delicate long term balance. If stress keeps returning or never really stops, the HPA axis and sympathetic nerves are pushed again and again across the day. Hair follicles turn out to be one of the casualties.

How hair gets its colour and what has to break.

Hair gets its colour from melanocytes, specialised cells in each follicle that pack melanin pigment into the growing hair shaft. These melanocytes do not last forever. They are constantly replaced from a small reserve of melanocyte stem cells (MSCs) that live in a protected niche in the bulge region of the follicle.

Each follicle cycles through growth (anagen), regression (catagen) and rest (telogen). At the start of a new growth phase, some MSCs 'wake up', leave the niche and turn into pigment cells that colour the new hair. Others stay behind to keep the reserve going. That reserve is finite and largely set early in life. As the years pass, damage and normal wear slowly reduce both the number and the quality of these stem cells. Once the pool for a given follicle is exhausted or too damaged to work, that follicle can no longer make enough pigment. From that point on, the hairs it produces grow in grey or white.

Melanocyte stem cells and stress [Ref 2].
Melanocyte stem cells and stress [Ref 2].

This delicate renewal process is not isolated from the rest of the body. It is wired into the same sympathetic nerves that drive the stress response, which reach into the bulge niche and signal directly to MSCs. What happens when those nerves fire under stress is the crucial step that links feeling under pressure to hair turning grey.

Stress and the collapse of pigment reserves.

The key culprit is noradrenaline released from sympathetic 'fight-or-flight' nerves directly into the pigment stem-cell niche.

Injecting the stress hormone noradrenaline causes rapid hair greying (center), but genetically removing the stress receptor protects the hair pigment (right) [Ref 1].
Injecting the stress hormone noradrenaline causes rapid hair greying (center), but genetically removing the stress receptor protects the hair pigment (right) [Ref 1].

If the body has a built-in way to lose hair colour under stress, it is reasonable to ask whether this ever brought an evolutionary benefit. One idea is that stress-induced greying acts as a visible status signal [Ref 3]. Because grey hair is strongly associated with age, it can serve as a quick cue for experience, competence and leadership. In mountain gorillas, for example, fully mature males develop a silver back and often go on to lead a troop [Ref 3]. By analogy, an individual who has survived enough challenges to 'earn' grey hair might be seen as more seasoned and trustworthy than their age alone would suggest.

Human evidence and reversibility.

It is still uncertain whether real-world stress always pushes follicles all the way to permanent loss, or whether it can sometimes only switch pigment production into an off state. A separate human study that followed colour bands along single hairs found that some grey hairs darkened again when everyday stress eased [Ref 4]. This suggests that in at least some follicles the pigment system is not fully destroyed but can be switched back on, hinting at partial reversibility.